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Canada’s social, economic, political, and environmental impacts on the Western Hemisphere have been largely overlooked by historians and other social scientists. Most narratives of the relationships between North America and the emerging markets of the south disproportionately focus on the United States. By downplaying Canada’s role, these narratives have fallen short in reconstructing the history of the region. Opportunism and Goodwill fills in these historical gaps, looking at the dynamics of the relationship between Canada and Colombia as they were spearheaded by Canada’s private sector.Stefano Tijerina argues that since the first era of globalization during the second half of the nineteenth century, Canada’s private sector has carved out niche markets across Latin America, sometimes working independently and in other instances working on behalf of foreign interests. In his historical analysis of these temporal and spatial dimensions, Tijerina shows that the long-term economic development of Canada and Colombia was intertwined and interdependent, ultimately stressing the importance of transnational approaches to the study of history. Contributing to questions about Canada’s "goodwill" and other benevolent constructs, Opportunism and Goodwill sets the historical foundation for current debates about Canadian industries across the world.
Stefano Tijerina is a lecturer in Management in the Maine Business School at the University of Maine.
AcknowledgmentsIntroductionPart One: From Informality to Formality 1. The Jamaican Entrepôt 2. Joining the International System3. Institutionalizing International Trade, 1867–1904Part Two: A Foothold in the Region 4. Colombia and the Emerging Latin American Market, 1904–1910 5. Internationalizing Banking and Insurance, 1886–19396. Tropical Oil and the Andian National Corporation, 1918–19457. Canadian Gold Dredging Operation, 1909–1962Part Three: The Early Promotional State 8. Limitations Under the Cold War9. Diplomatic Relations, 1941–1953 10. The 1953 Goodwill Trade Mission11. The 1968 Ministerial Mission 12. Official Development Assistance to Colombia ConclusionNotesBibliographyIndex
"This book provides one more piece in the understanding of this important but still neglected topic." - Rosana Barbosa, Saint Mary’s University (American Historical Review)